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A Private Affair (1963)

by Beppe Fenoglio

Other authors: See the other authors section.

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingMentions
363975,490 (3.91)5
"Beppe Fenoglio's A Private Affair is one of the great books of the Second World War and a masterpiece of modern Italian literature. Milton is the nom de guerre of the book's protagonist, a one-time student of English literature who, in the chaotic last years of the war, has joined a partisan band. Before the war, gangly Milton was in love with the beautiful Fulvia-Fulvia let him read poetry to her-and now he hears that a friend and fellow-partisan, handsome Giorgio, was sleeping with her at the time. Jealous and furious, Milton hastens to confront Giorgio, only to discover that he has been captured by the Germans. A Private Affair tells the store with Milton's mad quest-pursued through mud and fog and rain and terror, while barely evading German and Fascist patrols-to rescue his friend and settle a personal grudge from a lost world of peace. Italo Calvino praised the book for the "geometric tension" between its themes of love and war and for its unsettling and utterly persuasive mingling of absurdity and mystery. The British novelist Paul Bailey has called the novel's closing pages "superb and superbly exciting." A Private Affair is a peerless story of the violent heart and world"--… (more)
  1. 00
    La strada del davai by Nuto Revelli (Luder)
    Luder: The men who offer their testimony in Revelli's *La strada* may often have thought Fenoglio's partisans fought a "phoney war," but had Revelli's witnesses not been held in Soviet or German PoW camps many of them would surely have joined the resistance. Two highly complementary books, one a novel, the other an oral history, and both superb.… (more)
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» See also 5 mentions

Italian (3)  English (3)  Dutch (2)  Spanish (1)  All languages (9)
Showing 3 of 3
An Italian classic. The story of a young boy who in the midst of the partisan war took time off to find out whether his best friend had betrayed him with the girl of his dreams. An amazingly adventurous and epic walk through the misty mountains, always in the shooting field of fascist militia and a passionately disturbed mind: Miltons sufferings are not small. I liked this short novel, but I'm sure that it 'll strike an even clearer chord with Italian readers, given the historic context: After the capitulation of Italy in 1943 and the demission of Mussolini the country went through a tough period. Hitler's army answered with a brutal occupation of the north, Mussolini and his blackshirts stroke back ruthlessly after the humiliation. The conflict made deep cuts in Italian society and partisan resistance was among the fiercest in Europe. The overwhelming power of love makes it also appealing for young readers ( )
  chrisgalle | Mar 5, 2015 |
O livro que todo ex partisan tinha o desejo de escrever, segundo dizem.
Uma visão perfeita da guerra porque não fala só da guerra, porque em meio a tudo a vida continua. Tudo é tão real porque a captura de Giorgio (após a missão na névoa, no “mar de leite”), o encontro com os negros e os vermelhos, as divisões entre os partisans, a perseguição, a captura e o assassinato do alemão, tudo é visto a partir do triângulo amoroso de Milton, Fulvia e Giorgio.
SPOILER
“Corria ainda, mas sem contato com a terra, o corpo, movimentos, respiração, cansaço, desvanecidos. Depois, enquanto ainda corria, por lugares novos ou irreconhecíveis à sua visão esmorecida, a mente voltou-lhe a funcionar. Mas os pensamentos vinham de fora, golpeando-o na testa como seixos atirados de uma funda. 'Estou vivo, Fúlvia. Estou sozinho; Fúlvia, por pouco você me mata!'
Não parava de correr. O terreno subia sensivelmente, mal ele parecia correr no plano, um plano seco, elástico, convidativo. De repente surgiu um povoado à sua frente. Gemendo, Milton desviou do povoado, contornou-o sempre correndo a mais não poder. Mas quando já o tinha ultrapassado inesperadamente entrou à esquerda e contornou-o de volta. Precisava ver gente e ser visto, para convencer-se de que estava vivo, que não era um espírito que pairava esperando cair nas redes dos anjos. Sempre no mesmo ritmo alcançou a estrada do povoado e atravessou-a bem no meio. Os meninos saíam da escola ao ribombo daquele galope sobre o calçamento nos pequenos degraus com olhar fixo na curva. Irrompeu Milton, como um cavalo, os olhos totalmente brancos, a boca escancarada e espumante; a cada batida de pé, o barro chispava dos seus lados. Um grito adulto explodiu, talvez da professora na janela, mas ele já estava tão longe, perto da última casa, à beira do campo que ondulava. Corria, com os olhos arregalados, vendo muito pouco da terra e nada do céu. Tinha perfeita consciência da solidão, do silêncio, da paz, mas mesmo assim corria, facilmente, irresistivelmente. Então surgiu um bosque diante deles e Milton foi direto na sua direção. Assim que entrou sob as árvores, elas pareceram se fechar e formar um muro e, a um metro do muro, ele caiu.” ( )
  JuliaBoechat | Mar 30, 2013 |
Showing 3 of 3
Maar met alle verwijzingen naar het ridderlijk epos is Een privékwestie toch een uiterst moderne roman, met zijn eenvoudige, rake stijl en zijn typisch 20ste-eeuwse antiheld, die uiteindelijk niet rondzwerft om iets in handen te krijgen, maar om iets te weten te komen.
 

» Add other authors (18 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Beppe Fenoglioprimary authorall editionscalculated
Cazzullo, Aldosecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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"Beppe Fenoglio's A Private Affair is one of the great books of the Second World War and a masterpiece of modern Italian literature. Milton is the nom de guerre of the book's protagonist, a one-time student of English literature who, in the chaotic last years of the war, has joined a partisan band. Before the war, gangly Milton was in love with the beautiful Fulvia-Fulvia let him read poetry to her-and now he hears that a friend and fellow-partisan, handsome Giorgio, was sleeping with her at the time. Jealous and furious, Milton hastens to confront Giorgio, only to discover that he has been captured by the Germans. A Private Affair tells the store with Milton's mad quest-pursued through mud and fog and rain and terror, while barely evading German and Fascist patrols-to rescue his friend and settle a personal grudge from a lost world of peace. Italo Calvino praised the book for the "geometric tension" between its themes of love and war and for its unsettling and utterly persuasive mingling of absurdity and mystery. The British novelist Paul Bailey has called the novel's closing pages "superb and superbly exciting." A Private Affair is a peerless story of the violent heart and world"--

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